1. Plane coming in to land (carrying soldiers and equipment of Chilean contingent of UN)
2. Plane on runway
3. Soldiers around plane
4. UN vehicle being taken off the plane
5. Various of soldiers unloading equipment off the plane
7. Small plane on tarmac
8. Juan Emilio Cheyre getting off the plane
9. Juan Emilio Cheyre greeting people at the airport
10. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Juan Emilio Cheyre, Chief of the Armed Forces of Chile:
"We have been here nearly two months (Chilean troops in Haiti) and we are able to say that we have accomplished what we said, while managing to respect the dignity of the Haitian people. We hope that the second phase, in which we are also involved, will be successful too."
11. Various shots of journalists, soldiers and UN delegates at the press conference
12. SOUNDBITE: (English) Adama Guindo, UNDP representative in Haiti:
"The international community food resolution that was passed before the Security Council made it very clear that this time the commitment and the engagement for Haiti is in the long run."
13. Journalists and UN delegates at the press conference
STORYLINE:
UN peacekeepers took command from a US-led multinational force in Haiti on Tuesday, facing uncertainty about troop numbers and funding while armed rebels control the countryside and survivors of devastating floods were in urgent need of aid.
US MarineBrigadier GeneralRonald S. Coleman handed the baton to Brazil's Army GeneralAugustoHeleno Ribeiro Pereira at a ceremony in Port-au-Prince, the capital.
However the ceremony was largely symbolic since only a fraction of the projected 8,000-strong UN force has arrived.
The the ex-soldiers who helped oust PresidentJean-Bertrand Aristide in February - prompting the US intervention - remain armed and in command of much of the countryside in the Caribbean nation of 8 (m) million.
The outgoing force has made no effort to disarm them and the ex-soldiers say they will not lay down their arms until street gangs loyal to Aristide also surrender their weapons.
On Monday UN troops arrived in advance of Tuesday's handover, but details such as where the UN mission's headquarters would be located remained unclear.
UN representative Adama Guindo will head the six-month mission to Haiti until a permanent leader is appointed and he stressed that the UN was making a long term commitment to the engagement in Haiti.
Floods that killed nearly 1,700 people last week and stranded thousands in remote villages have forced US troops to stay past their June 1 departure date.
American and French forces in the four-nation multinational force were are the only ones with helicopters to bring aid to otherwise unreachable villages.
The 1,900 US troops in a 3,600-force including soldiers from France, Canada and Chile were to remain a month past their planned departure, through to the end of June, joining the UN force.
Whether the force will reach full strength is unclear - Brazil, Chile and Argentina have pledged up to 2,500 troops, while other countries, from strife-torn nations such as Nepal and Rwanda, have weighed in with promises of 750 troops each.
The UN force, to include 6,700 troops and 1,622 civilian police, will be led by 1,200 Brazilian troops, the largest contingent the South American country has sent on a UN mission.
The UN mission will try to keep a tentative peace in the divided country and train an ill-equipped and understaffed police force, as well as work on development projects.
UN Secretary GeneralKofi Annan has asked for a long-term UN commitment to transform Haiti - which has suffered more than 30 coups in 200 years - into "a functioning democracy."
But only a fraction of the 35 (m) million US dollars in requested aid has arrived.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/e85855f0be739fd41b81623411564d24
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

1. UN flag flying, soldiers
2. Brazilian commander talking to Chilean soldiers
3. Tilt up of Argentinean soldier at the ceremony
4. Soldiers at the ceremony
5. Pull out of Paraguayan badge to soldier
6. Soldiers standing in front of UN flag
7. international delegates and Haiti's Prime Minister at the ceremony
8. SOUNDBITE (French) Gerard Latortue, Haiti's Prime Minister:
"The mulitnational force from the United Nations for the stabilisation of Haiti is here. I want to seize this opportunity to clearly reaffirm to all my compatriots and Haitian people that this is in no way an occupation of our country. These foreign troops are the concrete expression and tangible manifestation of international solidarity."
9. Soldiers changing hats
10. Soldiers putting on their blue hats
11. Pull out of soldiers to UN flag
12. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) AugustoHeleno, Commander of the Brazilian troops:
"All of you, Chilean and Brazilian soldiers represent your countries with every single action and every single word. I'm convinced that all of us as well as with the other men who will join us will finish the mission successfully"
13. Brazilian troops at the airport
14. Brazilian soldiers on the plane
15. Brazilian soldiers getting off the plane
16. Brazilian soldiers with blue helmets at the airport
17. Brazilian flag
18. Brazilian soldiers taking equipment to a vehicle
19. Chilean troops getting off the plane
20. Chilean soldiers at the airport
STORYLINE:
UN peacekeepers took command from a US-led multinational force Tuesday, facing uncertainty over funding, troop numbers, armed rebels controlling the Haitian countryside and thousands of desperate survivors of devastating floods.
US MarineBrigadier GeneralRonald S. Coleman handed the baton to Brazilian ArmyGeneral Augusto Heleno Ribeiro Pereira at a ceremony in the Haitian capital, Port-au-Prince.
However the handover was largely symbolic since only a fraction of the projected 8,000-strong UN force has arrived.
After watching foreign soldiers come and go it the last 10 years, many Haitians wonder why they should have any hope the UN forces - cobbled together from countries ranging from Argentina to Zimbabwe - can succeed this time.
General Heleno did not say how the force planned to help thousands of homeless victims of the floods, many in remote villages threatened by further mudslides if heavy rains resume.
The floods that also killed nearly 1,700 people last week have forced US troops to stay past their June 1 departure date.
The Americans head a four-nation force that is passing the baton to the United Nations and controls the only helicopters - essential to bringing aid to otherwise unreachable villages.
Unless they get new orders, the 1,900 U.S. troops will leave at the end of June - many to return to combat in Iraq.
Some Canadian and French troops in the 3,600-member U.S.-led force, which arrived in February when a rebellion ousted PresidentJean-Bertrand Aristide, will join the U.N. mission.
Chile was sending 165 sailors expected Tuesday to replace its soldiers in the U.S.-led force.
The United Nations says there will be 6,700 troops and 1,622 civilian police from 30 countries, led by 1,200 Brazilian troops.
Whether the force will reach full strength is unclear - Brazil, Chile and Argentina have pledged up to 2,500 troops, while other countries, from strife-torn nations such as Nepal and Rwanda, have weighed in with promises of 750 troops each.
The UN mission will again try to keep a tentative peace in the divided country, and again train an ill-equipped and understaffed police force, as well as work on development projects.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/9f2f06ff836c58abece73f460cffa3d1
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

Buildings, operations and management have become increasingly sophisticated since the mid 20th century, when international airports began to provide infrastructure for international civilian flights. Detailed technical standards have been developed to ensure safety and common coding systems implemented to provide global consistency. The physical structures that serve millions of individual passengers and flights are among the most complex and interconnected in the world. By the second decade of the 21st century, there were over 1,200 international airports and almost two billion international passengers along with 50 million metric tonnes of cargo were passing through them annually.

Aristides Pereira

Aristides Maria Pereira (Portuguese pronunciation:[ɐɾiʃˈtidɨʒ mɐˈɾiɐ pɨˈɾejɾɐ]; November 17, 1923 – September 22, 2011) was a Cape Verdean politician. He was the first President of Cape Verde, serving from 1975 to 1991.

Biography

Pereira was born on the island of Boa Vista. His first major government job was chief of telecommunications in Guinea-Bissau. From the late 1940s until Cape Verde's independence, Pereira was heavily involved in the anti-colonial movement, organizing strikes and rising through the hierarchy of his party, the African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (Partido Africano da Independência da Guiné e Cabo Verde, known as PAIGC). In clandestine activity he often used the pseudonym Alfredo Bangura.

Although Pereira initially promised to lead a democratic and socialist nation upon becoming president, he compounded the country's chronic poverty by crushing dissent following the overthrow of Luís de Almeida Cabral. Cabral was the president of Guinea-Bissau and Pereira's ally in the drive to unite the two Lusophone states. However, Cape Verde had a much better human rights record than most countries in Africa and was known as one of the most democratic (despite the restriction on party activity) because of the power delegated to local citizens' committees. Cape Verde is one of the few African countries who never had the death penalty. After the coup in Bissau, which overthrew President Luís Cabral and replaced him with Nino Vieira, in November 1980, any formal attempt to achieve unity with Guinea-Bissau was over. The political repression sharply decreased but the one-party PAICV state established at independence remained until 1990.

Cape Verde

Cape Verde/ˌkeɪpˈvɜːrd/ or Cabo Verde/kɑːboʊˈvɜːrdeɪ/, /kæ-/ (Portuguese:Cabo Verde, pronounced:[ˈkabu ˈveɾdɨ]), officially the Republic of Cabo Verde, is an island country spanning an archipelago of 10 volcanic islands in the central Atlantic Ocean. Located 570 kilometres (350mi) off the coast of Western Africa, the islands cover a combined area of slightly over 4,000 square kilometres (1,500sqmi).

The Cape Verde archipelago was uninhabited until the 15th century, when Portuguese explorers discovered and colonized the islands, establishing the first European settlement in the tropics. Ideally located for the Atlantic slave trade, the islands grew prosperous throughout the 16th and 17th centuries, attracting merchants, privateers, and pirates. The end of slavery in the 19th century led to economic decline and emigration, although Cape Verde gradually recovered as an important commercial center and stopover for shipping routes. Incorporated as an overseas department of Portugal in 1951, the islands continued to agitate for independence, which was peacefully achieved in 1975.

Aristides

Aristides (/ˌærəˈstaɪdiːz/; Greek: Ἀριστείδης, Aristeides; 530 BC – 468 BC) was an ancient Athenianstatesman. Nicknamed "the Just", he flourished in the early quarter of Athens' Classical period and is remembered for his generalship in the Persian War. The ancient historian Herodotus cited him as "the best and most honourable man in Athens", and he received similarly reverent treatment in Plato's Socratic dialogues.

Biography

Aristides was the son of Lysimachus, and a member of a family of moderate fortune. Of his early life, it is only told that he became a follower of the statesman Cleisthenes and sided with the aristocratic party in Athenian politics. He first came to notice as strategos in command of his native tribe Antiochis at the Battle of Marathon, and it was no doubt in consequence of the distinction which he then achieved that he was elected archon eponymos for the ensuing year (489—488). In pursuance of a conservative policy which aimed at maintaining Athens as a land power, he was one of the chief opponents of the naval policy proposed by Themistocles.

REPLAY Aid arrives for flood hit region as UN prepares to take over

1. Plane coming in to land (carrying soldiers and equipment of Chilean contingent of UN)
2. Plane on runway
3. Soldiers around plane
4. UN vehicle being taken off the plane
5. Various of soldiers unloading equipment off the plane
7. Small plane on tarmac
8. Juan Emilio Cheyre getting off the plane
9. Juan Emilio Cheyre greeting people at the airport
10. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Juan Emilio Cheyre, Chief of the Armed Forces of Chile:
"We have been here nearly two months (Chilean troops in Haiti) and we are able to say that we have accomplished what we said, while managing to respect the dignity of the Haitian people. We hope that the second phase, in which we are also involved, will be successful too."
11. Various shots of journalists, soldiers and UN delegates at the press conference
12. SOUNDBITE: (English) Adama Guindo, UNDP representative in Haiti:
"The international community food resolution that was passed before the Security Council made it very clear that this time the commitment and the engagement for Haiti is in the long run."
13. Journalists and UN delegates at the press conference
STORYLINE:
UN peacekeepers took command from a US-led multinational force in Haiti on Tuesday, facing uncertainty about troop numbers and funding while armed rebels control the countryside and survivors of devastating floods were in urgent need of aid.
US MarineBrigadier GeneralRonald S. Coleman handed the baton to Brazil's Army GeneralAugustoHeleno Ribeiro Pereira at a ceremony in Port-au-Prince, the capital.
However the ceremony was largely symbolic since only a fraction of the projected 8,000-strong UN force has arrived.
The the ex-soldiers who helped oust PresidentJean-Bertrand Aristide in February - prompting the US intervention - remain armed and in command of much of the countryside in the Caribbean nation of 8 (m) million.
The outgoing force has made no effort to disarm them and the ex-soldiers say they will not lay down their arms until street gangs loyal to Aristide also surrender their weapons.
On Monday UN troops arrived in advance of Tuesday's handover, but details such as where the UN mission's headquarters would be located remained unclear.
UN representative Adama Guindo will head the six-month mission to Haiti until a permanent leader is appointed and he stressed that the UN was making a long term commitment to the engagement in Haiti.
Floods that killed nearly 1,700 people last week and stranded thousands in remote villages have forced US troops to stay past their June 1 departure date.
American and French forces in the four-nation multinational force were are the only ones with helicopters to bring aid to otherwise unreachable villages.
The 1,900 US troops in a 3,600-force including soldiers from France, Canada and Chile were to remain a month past their planned departure, through to the end of June, joining the UN force.
Whether the force will reach full strength is unclear - Brazil, Chile and Argentina have pledged up to 2,500 troops, while other countries, from strife-torn nations such as Nepal and Rwanda, have weighed in with promises of 750 troops each.
The UN force, to include 6,700 troops and 1,622 civilian police, will be led by 1,200 Brazilian troops, the largest contingent the South American country has sent on a UN mission.
The UN mission will try to keep a tentative peace in the divided country and train an ill-equipped and understaffed police force, as well as work on development projects.
UN Secretary GeneralKofi Annan has asked for a long-term UN commitment to transform Haiti - which has suffered more than 30 coups in 200 years - into "a functioning democracy."
But only a fraction of the 35 (m) million US dollars in requested aid has arrived.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/e85855f0be739fd41b81623411564d24
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

Handover of troops to new Brazilian command

1. UN flag flying, soldiers
2. Brazilian commander talking to Chilean soldiers
3. Tilt up of Argentinean soldier at the ceremony
4. Soldiers at the ceremony
5. Pull out of Paraguayan badge to soldier
6. Soldiers standing in front of UN flag
7. international delegates and Haiti's Prime Minister at the ceremony
8. SOUNDBITE (French) Gerard Latortue, Haiti's Prime Minister:
"The mulitnational force from the United Nations for the stabilisation of Haiti is here. I want to seize this opportunity to clearly reaffirm to all my compatriots and Haitian people that this is in no way an occupation of our country. These foreign troops are the concrete expression and tangible manifestation of international solidarity."
9. Soldiers changing hats
10. Soldiers putting on their blue hats
11. Pull out of soldiers to UN flag
12. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) AugustoHeleno, Commander of the Brazilian troops:
"All of you, Chilean and Brazilian soldiers represent your countries with every single action and every single word. I'm convinced that all of us as well as with the other men who will join us will finish the mission successfully"
13. Brazilian troops at the airport
14. Brazilian soldiers on the plane
15. Brazilian soldiers getting off the plane
16. Brazilian soldiers with blue helmets at the airport
17. Brazilian flag
18. Brazilian soldiers taking equipment to a vehicle
19. Chilean troops getting off the plane
20. Chilean soldiers at the airport
STORYLINE:
UN peacekeepers took command from a US-led multinational force Tuesday, facing uncertainty over funding, troop numbers, armed rebels controlling the Haitian countryside and thousands of desperate survivors of devastating floods.
US MarineBrigadier GeneralRonald S. Coleman handed the baton to Brazilian ArmyGeneral Augusto Heleno Ribeiro Pereira at a ceremony in the Haitian capital, Port-au-Prince.
However the handover was largely symbolic since only a fraction of the projected 8,000-strong UN force has arrived.
After watching foreign soldiers come and go it the last 10 years, many Haitians wonder why they should have any hope the UN forces - cobbled together from countries ranging from Argentina to Zimbabwe - can succeed this time.
General Heleno did not say how the force planned to help thousands of homeless victims of the floods, many in remote villages threatened by further mudslides if heavy rains resume.
The floods that also killed nearly 1,700 people last week have forced US troops to stay past their June 1 departure date.
The Americans head a four-nation force that is passing the baton to the United Nations and controls the only helicopters - essential to bringing aid to otherwise unreachable villages.
Unless they get new orders, the 1,900 U.S. troops will leave at the end of June - many to return to combat in Iraq.
Some Canadian and French troops in the 3,600-member U.S.-led force, which arrived in February when a rebellion ousted PresidentJean-Bertrand Aristide, will join the U.N. mission.
Chile was sending 165 sailors expected Tuesday to replace its soldiers in the U.S.-led force.
The United Nations says there will be 6,700 troops and 1,622 civilian police from 30 countries, led by 1,200 Brazilian troops.
Whether the force will reach full strength is unclear - Brazil, Chile and Argentina have pledged up to 2,500 troops, while other countries, from strife-torn nations such as Nepal and Rwanda, have weighed in with promises of 750 troops each.
The UN mission will again try to keep a tentative peace in the divided country, and again train an ill-equipped and understaffed police force, as well as work on development projects.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/9f2f06ff836c58abece73f460cffa3d1
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

US marines in aid effort, Brazil troops arrive

SHOTLIST
ALL TOKO MATERIAL - QUALITY AS INCOMING
Thiote, Haiti
1. Aerial of flood ravaged area
2. Helicopter dropping load of relief supplies
3. Troops uncovering net over supplies
4. Various of villagers loading food supplies into truck
5. Various of villagers waiting for relief supplies
Port-au-Prince
6. Various of Brazilian plane taxiing at the airport
7. Supplies being taken out of plane by a forklift
8. Brazilian troops standing in front of a plane
9. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Lieutenant ColonelAntonio CarlosFaillace, spokesman for the Brazilian troops:
"The Brazilian troops as well as troops from Chile, Paraguay, Peru and other nations have shown their will to cooperate with the situation in Haiti, especially in issues such as security, tactics, economics and humanitarian supplies."
10. Brazilian soldier unloading equipment from plane
11. Various of soldiers loading a truck
12. Brazilian soldiers standing
13. Close up of Brazilian flag logo on shirt, zoom out to soldier
14. Soldiers standing in front of a plane
STORYLINE
Governments and aid agencies on Saturday continued to fly emergency aid to the border of Dominican Republic and Haiti, an area where torrents of water and mudslides killed more than 11-hundred people.
Troops of the US-led multi-national force in Haiti ferried food, medicine, plastic sheeting and aid workers by helicopter to towns devastated by the flooding.
Some 15-hundred US marines and 400 troops from the US army and navy have been in Haiti since President Jean-Bertand Aristide was ousted in a popular rebellion in February that left more than 200 people dead.
The US soldiers are expected to leave at the end of June.
A small number of Brazilian soldiers flew into Haiti on Saturday as part of a new UN mission taking over from the US-led multi-national force.
A Brazilian military spokesperson said the 42 were an advance party and said another 150 soldiers were expected to arrive on Tuesday aboard four planes, including three-star GeneralAugustoHeleno Ribeiro Pereira, who will command the UN force.
Brazil's soldiers will provide the core of a UN-mandated force of 67-hundred troops and one thousand and 622 police.
A ceremonial handover is planned on June 1, though the transition will continue through the month.
Canadian, French and Chilean troops who were a part of the multi-national force are expected to remain indefinitely.
The mission is expected to last six months, but Brazilian defence ministry officials say troops may need to remain longer.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/3a57e428ba5a6b1a8bd733b3d7ba136f
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

Thomson TUI flight TOM 424 landing at Boa Vista Airport, Cape Verde

REPLAY Aid arrives for flood hit region as UN prepares to take over

1. Plane coming in to land (carrying soldiers and equipment of Chilean contingent of UN)
2. Plane on runway
3. Soldiers around plane
4. UN vehicle being taken off the plane
5. Various of soldiers unloading equipment off the plane
7. Small plane on tarmac
8. Juan Emilio Cheyre getting off the plane
9. Juan Emilio Cheyre greeting people at the airport
10. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Juan Emilio Cheyre, Chief of the Armed Forces of Chile:
"We have been here nearly two months (Chilean troops in Haiti) and we are able to say that we have accomplished what we said, while managing to respect the dignity of the Haitian people. We hope that the second phase, in which we are also involved, will be successful too."
11. Various shots of journalists, soldiers and UN delegates at the press conference...

Approach and landing Boa Vista Runway 03. NOT Flight Simulator

Handover of troops to new Brazilian command

1. UN flag flying, soldiers
2. Brazilian commander talking to Chilean soldiers
3. Tilt up of Argentinean soldier at the ceremony
4. Soldiers at the ceremony
5. Pull out of Paraguayan badge to soldier
6. Soldiers standing in front of UN flag
7. international delegates and Haiti's Prime Minister at the ceremony
8. SOUNDBITE (French) Gerard Latortue, Haiti's Prime Minister:
"The mulitnational force from the United Nations for the stabilisation of Haiti is here. I want to seize this opportunity to clearly reaffirm to all my compatriots and Haitian people that this is in no way an occupation of our country. These foreign troops are the concrete expression and tangible manifestation of international solidarity."
9. Soldiers changing hats
10. Soldiers putting on their blue hats
11. P...

US marines in aid effort, Brazil troops arrive

SHOTLIST
ALL TOKO MATERIAL - QUALITY AS INCOMING
Thiote, Haiti
1. Aerial of flood ravaged area
2. Helicopter dropping load of relief supplies
3. Troops uncovering net over supplies
4. Various of villagers loading food supplies into truck
5. Various of villagers waiting for relief supplies
Port-au-Prince
6. Various of Brazilian plane taxiing at the airport
7. Supplies being taken out of plane by a forklift
8. Brazilian troops standing in front of a plane
9. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Lieutenant ColonelAntonio CarlosFaillace, spokesman for the Brazilian troops:
"The Brazilian troops as well as troops from Chile, Paraguay, Peru and other nations have shown their will to cooperate with the situation in Haiti, especially in issues such as security, tactics, economics and humanita...

REPLAY Aid arrives for flood hit region as UN prepares to take over

1. Plane coming in to land (carrying soldiers and equipment of Chilean contingent of UN)
2. Plane on runway
3. Soldiers around plane
4. UN vehicle being take...

1. Plane coming in to land (carrying soldiers and equipment of Chilean contingent of UN)
2. Plane on runway
3. Soldiers around plane
4. UN vehicle being taken off the plane
5. Various of soldiers unloading equipment off the plane
7. Small plane on tarmac
8. Juan Emilio Cheyre getting off the plane
9. Juan Emilio Cheyre greeting people at the airport
10. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Juan Emilio Cheyre, Chief of the Armed Forces of Chile:
"We have been here nearly two months (Chilean troops in Haiti) and we are able to say that we have accomplished what we said, while managing to respect the dignity of the Haitian people. We hope that the second phase, in which we are also involved, will be successful too."
11. Various shots of journalists, soldiers and UN delegates at the press conference
12. SOUNDBITE: (English) Adama Guindo, UNDP representative in Haiti:
"The international community food resolution that was passed before the Security Council made it very clear that this time the commitment and the engagement for Haiti is in the long run."
13. Journalists and UN delegates at the press conference
STORYLINE:
UN peacekeepers took command from a US-led multinational force in Haiti on Tuesday, facing uncertainty about troop numbers and funding while armed rebels control the countryside and survivors of devastating floods were in urgent need of aid.
US MarineBrigadier GeneralRonald S. Coleman handed the baton to Brazil's Army GeneralAugustoHeleno Ribeiro Pereira at a ceremony in Port-au-Prince, the capital.
However the ceremony was largely symbolic since only a fraction of the projected 8,000-strong UN force has arrived.
The the ex-soldiers who helped oust PresidentJean-Bertrand Aristide in February - prompting the US intervention - remain armed and in command of much of the countryside in the Caribbean nation of 8 (m) million.
The outgoing force has made no effort to disarm them and the ex-soldiers say they will not lay down their arms until street gangs loyal to Aristide also surrender their weapons.
On Monday UN troops arrived in advance of Tuesday's handover, but details such as where the UN mission's headquarters would be located remained unclear.
UN representative Adama Guindo will head the six-month mission to Haiti until a permanent leader is appointed and he stressed that the UN was making a long term commitment to the engagement in Haiti.
Floods that killed nearly 1,700 people last week and stranded thousands in remote villages have forced US troops to stay past their June 1 departure date.
American and French forces in the four-nation multinational force were are the only ones with helicopters to bring aid to otherwise unreachable villages.
The 1,900 US troops in a 3,600-force including soldiers from France, Canada and Chile were to remain a month past their planned departure, through to the end of June, joining the UN force.
Whether the force will reach full strength is unclear - Brazil, Chile and Argentina have pledged up to 2,500 troops, while other countries, from strife-torn nations such as Nepal and Rwanda, have weighed in with promises of 750 troops each.
The UN force, to include 6,700 troops and 1,622 civilian police, will be led by 1,200 Brazilian troops, the largest contingent the South American country has sent on a UN mission.
The UN mission will try to keep a tentative peace in the divided country and train an ill-equipped and understaffed police force, as well as work on development projects.
UN Secretary GeneralKofi Annan has asked for a long-term UN commitment to transform Haiti - which has suffered more than 30 coups in 200 years - into "a functioning democracy."
But only a fraction of the 35 (m) million US dollars in requested aid has arrived.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/e85855f0be739fd41b81623411564d24
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

1. Plane coming in to land (carrying soldiers and equipment of Chilean contingent of UN)
2. Plane on runway
3. Soldiers around plane
4. UN vehicle being taken off the plane
5. Various of soldiers unloading equipment off the plane
7. Small plane on tarmac
8. Juan Emilio Cheyre getting off the plane
9. Juan Emilio Cheyre greeting people at the airport
10. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Juan Emilio Cheyre, Chief of the Armed Forces of Chile:
"We have been here nearly two months (Chilean troops in Haiti) and we are able to say that we have accomplished what we said, while managing to respect the dignity of the Haitian people. We hope that the second phase, in which we are also involved, will be successful too."
11. Various shots of journalists, soldiers and UN delegates at the press conference
12. SOUNDBITE: (English) Adama Guindo, UNDP representative in Haiti:
"The international community food resolution that was passed before the Security Council made it very clear that this time the commitment and the engagement for Haiti is in the long run."
13. Journalists and UN delegates at the press conference
STORYLINE:
UN peacekeepers took command from a US-led multinational force in Haiti on Tuesday, facing uncertainty about troop numbers and funding while armed rebels control the countryside and survivors of devastating floods were in urgent need of aid.
US MarineBrigadier GeneralRonald S. Coleman handed the baton to Brazil's Army GeneralAugustoHeleno Ribeiro Pereira at a ceremony in Port-au-Prince, the capital.
However the ceremony was largely symbolic since only a fraction of the projected 8,000-strong UN force has arrived.
The the ex-soldiers who helped oust PresidentJean-Bertrand Aristide in February - prompting the US intervention - remain armed and in command of much of the countryside in the Caribbean nation of 8 (m) million.
The outgoing force has made no effort to disarm them and the ex-soldiers say they will not lay down their arms until street gangs loyal to Aristide also surrender their weapons.
On Monday UN troops arrived in advance of Tuesday's handover, but details such as where the UN mission's headquarters would be located remained unclear.
UN representative Adama Guindo will head the six-month mission to Haiti until a permanent leader is appointed and he stressed that the UN was making a long term commitment to the engagement in Haiti.
Floods that killed nearly 1,700 people last week and stranded thousands in remote villages have forced US troops to stay past their June 1 departure date.
American and French forces in the four-nation multinational force were are the only ones with helicopters to bring aid to otherwise unreachable villages.
The 1,900 US troops in a 3,600-force including soldiers from France, Canada and Chile were to remain a month past their planned departure, through to the end of June, joining the UN force.
Whether the force will reach full strength is unclear - Brazil, Chile and Argentina have pledged up to 2,500 troops, while other countries, from strife-torn nations such as Nepal and Rwanda, have weighed in with promises of 750 troops each.
The UN force, to include 6,700 troops and 1,622 civilian police, will be led by 1,200 Brazilian troops, the largest contingent the South American country has sent on a UN mission.
The UN mission will try to keep a tentative peace in the divided country and train an ill-equipped and understaffed police force, as well as work on development projects.
UN Secretary GeneralKofi Annan has asked for a long-term UN commitment to transform Haiti - which has suffered more than 30 coups in 200 years - into "a functioning democracy."
But only a fraction of the 35 (m) million US dollars in requested aid has arrived.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/e85855f0be739fd41b81623411564d24
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

1. UN flag flying, soldiers
2. Brazilian commander talking to Chilean soldiers
3. Tilt up of Argentinean soldier at the ceremony
4. Soldiers at the ceremony
5. Pull out of Paraguayan badge to soldier
6. Soldiers standing in front of UN flag
7. international delegates and Haiti's Prime Minister at the ceremony
8. SOUNDBITE (French) Gerard Latortue, Haiti's Prime Minister:
"The mulitnational force from the United Nations for the stabilisation of Haiti is here. I want to seize this opportunity to clearly reaffirm to all my compatriots and Haitian people that this is in no way an occupation of our country. These foreign troops are the concrete expression and tangible manifestation of international solidarity."
9. Soldiers changing hats
10. Soldiers putting on their blue hats
11. Pull out of soldiers to UN flag
12. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) AugustoHeleno, Commander of the Brazilian troops:
"All of you, Chilean and Brazilian soldiers represent your countries with every single action and every single word. I'm convinced that all of us as well as with the other men who will join us will finish the mission successfully"
13. Brazilian troops at the airport
14. Brazilian soldiers on the plane
15. Brazilian soldiers getting off the plane
16. Brazilian soldiers with blue helmets at the airport
17. Brazilian flag
18. Brazilian soldiers taking equipment to a vehicle
19. Chilean troops getting off the plane
20. Chilean soldiers at the airport
STORYLINE:
UN peacekeepers took command from a US-led multinational force Tuesday, facing uncertainty over funding, troop numbers, armed rebels controlling the Haitian countryside and thousands of desperate survivors of devastating floods.
US MarineBrigadier GeneralRonald S. Coleman handed the baton to Brazilian ArmyGeneral Augusto Heleno Ribeiro Pereira at a ceremony in the Haitian capital, Port-au-Prince.
However the handover was largely symbolic since only a fraction of the projected 8,000-strong UN force has arrived.
After watching foreign soldiers come and go it the last 10 years, many Haitians wonder why they should have any hope the UN forces - cobbled together from countries ranging from Argentina to Zimbabwe - can succeed this time.
General Heleno did not say how the force planned to help thousands of homeless victims of the floods, many in remote villages threatened by further mudslides if heavy rains resume.
The floods that also killed nearly 1,700 people last week have forced US troops to stay past their June 1 departure date.
The Americans head a four-nation force that is passing the baton to the United Nations and controls the only helicopters - essential to bringing aid to otherwise unreachable villages.
Unless they get new orders, the 1,900 U.S. troops will leave at the end of June - many to return to combat in Iraq.
Some Canadian and French troops in the 3,600-member U.S.-led force, which arrived in February when a rebellion ousted PresidentJean-Bertrand Aristide, will join the U.N. mission.
Chile was sending 165 sailors expected Tuesday to replace its soldiers in the U.S.-led force.
The United Nations says there will be 6,700 troops and 1,622 civilian police from 30 countries, led by 1,200 Brazilian troops.
Whether the force will reach full strength is unclear - Brazil, Chile and Argentina have pledged up to 2,500 troops, while other countries, from strife-torn nations such as Nepal and Rwanda, have weighed in with promises of 750 troops each.
The UN mission will again try to keep a tentative peace in the divided country, and again train an ill-equipped and understaffed police force, as well as work on development projects.
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1. UN flag flying, soldiers
2. Brazilian commander talking to Chilean soldiers
3. Tilt up of Argentinean soldier at the ceremony
4. Soldiers at the ceremony
5. Pull out of Paraguayan badge to soldier
6. Soldiers standing in front of UN flag
7. international delegates and Haiti's Prime Minister at the ceremony
8. SOUNDBITE (French) Gerard Latortue, Haiti's Prime Minister:
"The mulitnational force from the United Nations for the stabilisation of Haiti is here. I want to seize this opportunity to clearly reaffirm to all my compatriots and Haitian people that this is in no way an occupation of our country. These foreign troops are the concrete expression and tangible manifestation of international solidarity."
9. Soldiers changing hats
10. Soldiers putting on their blue hats
11. Pull out of soldiers to UN flag
12. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) AugustoHeleno, Commander of the Brazilian troops:
"All of you, Chilean and Brazilian soldiers represent your countries with every single action and every single word. I'm convinced that all of us as well as with the other men who will join us will finish the mission successfully"
13. Brazilian troops at the airport
14. Brazilian soldiers on the plane
15. Brazilian soldiers getting off the plane
16. Brazilian soldiers with blue helmets at the airport
17. Brazilian flag
18. Brazilian soldiers taking equipment to a vehicle
19. Chilean troops getting off the plane
20. Chilean soldiers at the airport
STORYLINE:
UN peacekeepers took command from a US-led multinational force Tuesday, facing uncertainty over funding, troop numbers, armed rebels controlling the Haitian countryside and thousands of desperate survivors of devastating floods.
US MarineBrigadier GeneralRonald S. Coleman handed the baton to Brazilian ArmyGeneral Augusto Heleno Ribeiro Pereira at a ceremony in the Haitian capital, Port-au-Prince.
However the handover was largely symbolic since only a fraction of the projected 8,000-strong UN force has arrived.
After watching foreign soldiers come and go it the last 10 years, many Haitians wonder why they should have any hope the UN forces - cobbled together from countries ranging from Argentina to Zimbabwe - can succeed this time.
General Heleno did not say how the force planned to help thousands of homeless victims of the floods, many in remote villages threatened by further mudslides if heavy rains resume.
The floods that also killed nearly 1,700 people last week have forced US troops to stay past their June 1 departure date.
The Americans head a four-nation force that is passing the baton to the United Nations and controls the only helicopters - essential to bringing aid to otherwise unreachable villages.
Unless they get new orders, the 1,900 U.S. troops will leave at the end of June - many to return to combat in Iraq.
Some Canadian and French troops in the 3,600-member U.S.-led force, which arrived in February when a rebellion ousted PresidentJean-Bertrand Aristide, will join the U.N. mission.
Chile was sending 165 sailors expected Tuesday to replace its soldiers in the U.S.-led force.
The United Nations says there will be 6,700 troops and 1,622 civilian police from 30 countries, led by 1,200 Brazilian troops.
Whether the force will reach full strength is unclear - Brazil, Chile and Argentina have pledged up to 2,500 troops, while other countries, from strife-torn nations such as Nepal and Rwanda, have weighed in with promises of 750 troops each.
The UN mission will again try to keep a tentative peace in the divided country, and again train an ill-equipped and understaffed police force, as well as work on development projects.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/9f2f06ff836c58abece73f460cffa3d1
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SHOTLIST
ALL TOKO MATERIAL - QUALITY AS INCOMING
Thiote, Haiti
1. Aerial of flood ravaged area
2. Helicopter dropping load of relief supplies
3. Troops uncovering net over supplies
4. Various of villagers loading food supplies into truck
5. Various of villagers waiting for relief supplies
Port-au-Prince
6. Various of Brazilian plane taxiing at the airport
7. Supplies being taken out of plane by a forklift
8. Brazilian troops standing in front of a plane
9. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Lieutenant ColonelAntonio CarlosFaillace, spokesman for the Brazilian troops:
"The Brazilian troops as well as troops from Chile, Paraguay, Peru and other nations have shown their will to cooperate with the situation in Haiti, especially in issues such as security, tactics, economics and humanitarian supplies."
10. Brazilian soldier unloading equipment from plane
11. Various of soldiers loading a truck
12. Brazilian soldiers standing
13. Close up of Brazilian flag logo on shirt, zoom out to soldier
14. Soldiers standing in front of a plane
STORYLINE
Governments and aid agencies on Saturday continued to fly emergency aid to the border of Dominican Republic and Haiti, an area where torrents of water and mudslides killed more than 11-hundred people.
Troops of the US-led multi-national force in Haiti ferried food, medicine, plastic sheeting and aid workers by helicopter to towns devastated by the flooding.
Some 15-hundred US marines and 400 troops from the US army and navy have been in Haiti since President Jean-Bertand Aristide was ousted in a popular rebellion in February that left more than 200 people dead.
The US soldiers are expected to leave at the end of June.
A small number of Brazilian soldiers flew into Haiti on Saturday as part of a new UN mission taking over from the US-led multi-national force.
A Brazilian military spokesperson said the 42 were an advance party and said another 150 soldiers were expected to arrive on Tuesday aboard four planes, including three-star GeneralAugustoHeleno Ribeiro Pereira, who will command the UN force.
Brazil's soldiers will provide the core of a UN-mandated force of 67-hundred troops and one thousand and 622 police.
A ceremonial handover is planned on June 1, though the transition will continue through the month.
Canadian, French and Chilean troops who were a part of the multi-national force are expected to remain indefinitely.
The mission is expected to last six months, but Brazilian defence ministry officials say troops may need to remain longer.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/3a57e428ba5a6b1a8bd733b3d7ba136f
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SHOTLIST
ALL TOKO MATERIAL - QUALITY AS INCOMING
Thiote, Haiti
1. Aerial of flood ravaged area
2. Helicopter dropping load of relief supplies
3. Troops uncovering net over supplies
4. Various of villagers loading food supplies into truck
5. Various of villagers waiting for relief supplies
Port-au-Prince
6. Various of Brazilian plane taxiing at the airport
7. Supplies being taken out of plane by a forklift
8. Brazilian troops standing in front of a plane
9. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Lieutenant ColonelAntonio CarlosFaillace, spokesman for the Brazilian troops:
"The Brazilian troops as well as troops from Chile, Paraguay, Peru and other nations have shown their will to cooperate with the situation in Haiti, especially in issues such as security, tactics, economics and humanitarian supplies."
10. Brazilian soldier unloading equipment from plane
11. Various of soldiers loading a truck
12. Brazilian soldiers standing
13. Close up of Brazilian flag logo on shirt, zoom out to soldier
14. Soldiers standing in front of a plane
STORYLINE
Governments and aid agencies on Saturday continued to fly emergency aid to the border of Dominican Republic and Haiti, an area where torrents of water and mudslides killed more than 11-hundred people.
Troops of the US-led multi-national force in Haiti ferried food, medicine, plastic sheeting and aid workers by helicopter to towns devastated by the flooding.
Some 15-hundred US marines and 400 troops from the US army and navy have been in Haiti since President Jean-Bertand Aristide was ousted in a popular rebellion in February that left more than 200 people dead.
The US soldiers are expected to leave at the end of June.
A small number of Brazilian soldiers flew into Haiti on Saturday as part of a new UN mission taking over from the US-led multi-national force.
A Brazilian military spokesperson said the 42 were an advance party and said another 150 soldiers were expected to arrive on Tuesday aboard four planes, including three-star GeneralAugustoHeleno Ribeiro Pereira, who will command the UN force.
Brazil's soldiers will provide the core of a UN-mandated force of 67-hundred troops and one thousand and 622 police.
A ceremonial handover is planned on June 1, though the transition will continue through the month.
Canadian, French and Chilean troops who were a part of the multi-national force are expected to remain indefinitely.
The mission is expected to last six months, but Brazilian defence ministry officials say troops may need to remain longer.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/3a57e428ba5a6b1a8bd733b3d7ba136f
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork

REPLAY Aid arrives for flood hit region as UN prepares to take over

1. Plane coming in to land (carrying soldiers and equipment of Chilean contingent of UN)
2. Plane on runway
3. Soldiers around plane
4. UN vehicle being taken off the plane
5. Various of soldiers unloading equipment off the plane
7. Small plane on tarmac
8. Juan Emilio Cheyre getting off the plane
9. Juan Emilio Cheyre greeting people at the airport
10. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Juan Emilio Cheyre, Chief of the Armed Forces of Chile:
"We have been here nearly two months (Chilean troops in Haiti) and we are able to say that we have accomplished what we said, while managing to respect the dignity of the Haitian people. We hope that the second phase, in which we are also involved, will be successful too."
11. Various shots of journalists, soldiers and UN delegates at the press conference
12. SOUNDBITE: (English) Adama Guindo, UNDP representative in Haiti:
"The international community food resolution that was passed before the Security Council made it very clear that this time the commitment and the engagement for Haiti is in the long run."
13. Journalists and UN delegates at the press conference
STORYLINE:
UN peacekeepers took command from a US-led multinational force in Haiti on Tuesday, facing uncertainty about troop numbers and funding while armed rebels control the countryside and survivors of devastating floods were in urgent need of aid.
US MarineBrigadier GeneralRonald S. Coleman handed the baton to Brazil's Army GeneralAugustoHeleno Ribeiro Pereira at a ceremony in Port-au-Prince, the capital.
However the ceremony was largely symbolic since only a fraction of the projected 8,000-strong UN force has arrived.
The the ex-soldiers who helped oust PresidentJean-Bertrand Aristide in February - prompting the US intervention - remain armed and in command of much of the countryside in the Caribbean nation of 8 (m) million.
The outgoing force has made no effort to disarm them and the ex-soldiers say they will not lay down their arms until street gangs loyal to Aristide also surrender their weapons.
On Monday UN troops arrived in advance of Tuesday's handover, but details such as where the UN mission's headquarters would be located remained unclear.
UN representative Adama Guindo will head the six-month mission to Haiti until a permanent leader is appointed and he stressed that the UN was making a long term commitment to the engagement in Haiti.
Floods that killed nearly 1,700 people last week and stranded thousands in remote villages have forced US troops to stay past their June 1 departure date.
American and French forces in the four-nation multinational force were are the only ones with helicopters to bring aid to otherwise unreachable villages.
The 1,900 US troops in a 3,600-force including soldiers from France, Canada and Chile were to remain a month past their planned departure, through to the end of June, joining the UN force.
Whether the force will reach full strength is unclear - Brazil, Chile and Argentina have pledged up to 2,500 troops, while other countries, from strife-torn nations such as Nepal and Rwanda, have weighed in with promises of 750 troops each.
The UN force, to include 6,700 troops and 1,622 civilian police, will be led by 1,200 Brazilian troops, the largest contingent the South American country has sent on a UN mission.
The UN mission will try to keep a tentative peace in the divided country and train an ill-equipped and understaffed police force, as well as work on development projects.
UN Secretary GeneralKofi Annan has asked for a long-term UN commitment to transform Haiti - which has suffered more than 30 coups in 200 years - into "a functioning democracy."
But only a fraction of the 35 (m) million US dollars in requested aid has arrived.
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Handover of troops to new Brazilian command

1. UN flag flying, soldiers
2. Brazilian commander talking to Chilean soldiers
3. Tilt up of Argentinean soldier at the ceremony
4. Soldiers at the ceremony
5. Pull out of Paraguayan badge to soldier
6. Soldiers standing in front of UN flag
7. international delegates and Haiti's Prime Minister at the ceremony
8. SOUNDBITE (French) Gerard Latortue, Haiti's Prime Minister:
"The mulitnational force from the United Nations for the stabilisation of Haiti is here. I want to seize this opportunity to clearly reaffirm to all my compatriots and Haitian people that this is in no way an occupation of our country. These foreign troops are the concrete expression and tangible manifestation of international solidarity."
9. Soldiers changing hats
10. Soldiers putting on their blue hats
11. Pull out of soldiers to UN flag
12. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) AugustoHeleno, Commander of the Brazilian troops:
"All of you, Chilean and Brazilian soldiers represent your countries with every single action and every single word. I'm convinced that all of us as well as with the other men who will join us will finish the mission successfully"
13. Brazilian troops at the airport
14. Brazilian soldiers on the plane
15. Brazilian soldiers getting off the plane
16. Brazilian soldiers with blue helmets at the airport
17. Brazilian flag
18. Brazilian soldiers taking equipment to a vehicle
19. Chilean troops getting off the plane
20. Chilean soldiers at the airport
STORYLINE:
UN peacekeepers took command from a US-led multinational force Tuesday, facing uncertainty over funding, troop numbers, armed rebels controlling the Haitian countryside and thousands of desperate survivors of devastating floods.
US MarineBrigadier GeneralRonald S. Coleman handed the baton to Brazilian ArmyGeneral Augusto Heleno Ribeiro Pereira at a ceremony in the Haitian capital, Port-au-Prince.
However the handover was largely symbolic since only a fraction of the projected 8,000-strong UN force has arrived.
After watching foreign soldiers come and go it the last 10 years, many Haitians wonder why they should have any hope the UN forces - cobbled together from countries ranging from Argentina to Zimbabwe - can succeed this time.
General Heleno did not say how the force planned to help thousands of homeless victims of the floods, many in remote villages threatened by further mudslides if heavy rains resume.
The floods that also killed nearly 1,700 people last week have forced US troops to stay past their June 1 departure date.
The Americans head a four-nation force that is passing the baton to the United Nations and controls the only helicopters - essential to bringing aid to otherwise unreachable villages.
Unless they get new orders, the 1,900 U.S. troops will leave at the end of June - many to return to combat in Iraq.
Some Canadian and French troops in the 3,600-member U.S.-led force, which arrived in February when a rebellion ousted PresidentJean-Bertrand Aristide, will join the U.N. mission.
Chile was sending 165 sailors expected Tuesday to replace its soldiers in the U.S.-led force.
The United Nations says there will be 6,700 troops and 1,622 civilian police from 30 countries, led by 1,200 Brazilian troops.
Whether the force will reach full strength is unclear - Brazil, Chile and Argentina have pledged up to 2,500 troops, while other countries, from strife-torn nations such as Nepal and Rwanda, have weighed in with promises of 750 troops each.
The UN mission will again try to keep a tentative peace in the divided country, and again train an ill-equipped and understaffed police force, as well as work on development projects.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/9f2f06ff836c58abece73f460cffa3d1
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Buildings, operations and management have become increasingly sophisticated since the mid 20th century, when international airports began to provide infrastructure for international civilian flights. Detailed technical standards have been developed to ensure safety and common coding systems implemented to provide global consistency. The physical structures that serve millions of individual passengers and flights are among the most complex and interconnected in the world. By the second decade of the 21st century, there were over 1,200 international airports and almost two billion international passengers along with 50 million metric tonnes of cargo were passing through them annually.

Greek owner Euroseas has received the relevant approvals for its EuroDry spin-off, which will be listed on the NASDAQ Capital Market under the symbol EDRY from May 30. Euroseas shareholders will receive one share of EuroDry for every five shares they own in Euroseas. Aristides Pittas, chairman and CEO of Euroseas, commented ... ....

Soumahoro Bangaly is considering representing Guinea so that he can play in the Africa Cup of Nations (Afcon) with chances of breaking into the star-studded Ivory Coast slim ... Bangaly wasn’t oblivious of what it would take to achieve that objective with most of the Elephants’ players plying their trade in Europe ... But you have to go step-by-step ... (Aristide) Bance also wanted me to play for Burkina Faso and the coach was watching me....

Arts High School held their 2018 prom at the Westmont Country Club Tuesday night with the students dancing to the music played by DJ BrianRodrigues... Arts High School 2017 Prom (PHOTOS) Arts High School 2016... Aristide Economopoulos can be reached at aeconomopoulos@njadvancemedia.com and you can follow him on Twitter at @AristideNJAM and Instagram at @aeconomopoulos FindNJ.com on Facebook ....

Thomson 757-200 take-off from Boa Vista Rabil airp...

Travel Service B738: A short flight from Boa Vista...

Travel Service 737-8 Approach and Landing Boa Vist...

International Airport

Wide awakeI'm on a plane out of townFly awayFrom the weight of the worldOn the groundI'm internationalBut I don't know where to goHopefully where summer daysCan melt these winter bonesI'm internationalAnd you're orbiting my brainI'm reduced to writing nothingAll over napkins on the planeWide awakeI'm on a plane out of townTaking pictures of myselfIn the mirror on wallTrying hard not to make my spaceThe loneliest place of allEarly warning all across the skyClouds are rolling in on your lightAny change from here would beThe wisest change of allAny place from here up hereWould be the finest place to fallWide awakeI'm on a plane out of townI'm losing track of myselfOn all the time zone linesAnd if I daylight saveDo I jump ahead or fall behind?And I'm fine 'cause I knowAny plane I rideCan fly me homeAnd I'm fine 'cause I knowYou know, I knowIt's easy to seeClouds were built for dreamsBecause nothing up thereIs as easy as it seemsI step outAnd try to walk aroundAs I fall, I look upAnd wonder why it let me downI'm internationalThat's twice the speed of soundI just hope I take off from hereBefore I hit the groundIf I could get to heavenBy an airplane in the skyWe would always be in loveAnd we would always love to flyWide awakeI'm on a plane out of townTaking pictures of myselfIn the mirror on wallTrying hard not to make my spaceThe loneliest place of allAnd I'm fine 'cause I knowAny plane I rideCan fly me homeAnd I'm fine 'cause I knowYou know, I knowAnd I'm fine 'cause I knowAny plane I rideCan fly me homeAnd I'm fine 'cause I knowAny plane I rideCan fly me homeYou know, I know

Latest News for: aristides pereira international airport

Greek owner Euroseas has received the relevant approvals for its EuroDry spin-off, which will be listed on the NASDAQ Capital Market under the symbol EDRY from May 30. Euroseas shareholders will receive one share of EuroDry for every five shares they own in Euroseas. Aristides Pittas, chairman and CEO of Euroseas, commented ... ....

Soumahoro Bangaly is considering representing Guinea so that he can play in the Africa Cup of Nations (Afcon) with chances of breaking into the star-studded Ivory Coast slim ... Bangaly wasn’t oblivious of what it would take to achieve that objective with most of the Elephants’ players plying their trade in Europe ... But you have to go step-by-step ... (Aristide) Bance also wanted me to play for Burkina Faso and the coach was watching me....

Arts High School held their 2018 prom at the Westmont Country Club Tuesday night with the students dancing to the music played by DJ BrianRodrigues... Arts High School 2017 Prom (PHOTOS) Arts High School 2016... Aristide Economopoulos can be reached at aeconomopoulos@njadvancemedia.com and you can follow him on Twitter at @AristideNJAM and Instagram at @aeconomopoulos FindNJ.com on Facebook ....

Jamaica's foreign policy appears to be becoming less possible to predict in respect of what stance the country will take on international issues ... A few references should suffice to make our point ... The US will always be one of our best friends, but we have had reason to take a principled position on such matters as opposing the US embargo on Cuba and giving sanctuary to ousted HaitianPresidentJean BertrandAristide ... ....

Hillsborough High School held its 2018 prom on May 18th at the East Brunswick Hilton Friday night ... Then tag your photos #njprom ... Aristide Economopoulos can be reached at aeconomopoulos@njadvancemedia.com and you can follow him on Twitter at @AristideNJAM and Instagram at @aeconomopoulos FindNJ.com on Facebook ....